Angry Kaomoji
Copy angry kaomoji, mad Japanese text faces, annoyed reactions, table-flip style emoticons, and frustrated text faces for chats, captions, and comments.
Popular angry kaomoji
Short, readable faces are usually the best fit for bios, usernames, and chat replies.
Angry Kaomoji copy and paste
130 text faces shown in All.
Discord messages
Use angry kaomoji for quick reactions in servers, DMs, and group chats.
Instagram bios
Short angry text faces and symbols can add personality without taking too much profile space.
TikTok captions
Add angry kaomoji around names, mood captions, edits, and short posts.
Roblox names
Compact angry kaomoji are easier to fit into display names and short profile text.
How to use angry kaomoji
Mock outrage with friends
- ( 。 •`ᴖ´• 。) reads as fond exasperation, not real anger
- (¬_¬") is the standard sceptical side-eye
- Keep 💢 and 凸 out of friendly messages
Disapproving of something
- ಠ_ಠ needs no words at all
- ( ಠ ࡇಠ) is quieter and more judgemental
- (¬、¬) is the mildest glance in the family
Venting
- ヽ(#`Д´)ノ shouts with both arms up
- ლ(ಠ益ಠ)ლ reads as despair at absurdity
- (💢ง⋋⌓⋌)ง is the loudest option here
Taking on a challenge
- (ง •̀_•́)ง is determination, not anger
- (๑•̀ㅁ•́๑)✧ adds a spark of resolve
- ( •̀ ᴖ •́ ) reads as quiet stubbornness
Angry Kaomoji message templates
Copy a whole message for chats, captions, and comments.
Angry Kaomoji meanings
( 。 •`ᴖ´• 。)
A small pout with slanted brows. Annoyed rather than furious, and often affectionate.
(¬_¬")
Eyes swivelled sideways with a sweat drop. Scepticism and mild exasperation.
ಠ_ಠ
The look of disapproval. Two Kannada letters, and among the most recognised faces on the internet.
ヽ(#`Д´)ノ
Raised arms with an anger mark. Shouting rather than sulking.
ლ(ಠ益ಠ)ლ
Hands raised in exasperation. Reads as "why is this happening" more than genuine rage.
(ง •̀_•́)ง
Raised fists. Determination as much as anger, often used for taking on a challenge.
(ꐦ¬_¬)
The ꐦ mark above the face is a vein of irritation. Side-eye with real annoyance behind it.
(♯`∧´)
Furrowed brows and a cross-hatch anger mark. Straightforwardly cross.
(💢ง⋋⌓⋌)ง
Fists plus an anger symbol. The most explicit rage face here.
凸( •̀_•́ )凸
A rude gesture on both sides. Use sparingly; it is genuinely rude.
(¬、¬)
A flat sideways glance. The mildest form of the side-eye family.
( ಠ ࡇಠ)
Disapproval with a small mouth. Judgemental and quiet.
( •̀ ᴖ •́ )
A determined pout with no anger marks. Reads as stubbornness.
(๑•̀ㅁ•́๑)✧
A sparkling, resolute face. Fired up rather than angry.
(`⌒´)
A simple scowl. Compact and safe on old devices.
Related kaomoji
Keep browsing nearby text face collections.
Angry Kaomoji — background
The characters are borrowed from other alphabets
Characters that look purpose-built for text faces are almost always loaned. ᐢ is Canadian Aboriginal syllabics, ﻌ is Arabic, and ᗜ is Canadian Aboriginal too. Nobody designed them for kaomoji; the community simply found shapes that read as ears, whiskers, and grins.
Copying is the whole distribution mechanism
Kaomoji spread with no central registry, no approval body, and no version numbers, unlike emoji which need a Unicode proposal. A face becomes standard purely because enough people copied it, which is why several near-identical variants of the same expression circulate at once.
Tone comes from context, not the face
The same face can read as sincere or sarcastic depending on the sentence it follows. Kaomoji carry no fixed meaning the way a traffic sign does; they modify the sentence they are attached to, much as tone of voice modifies speech.
ಠ_ಠ is a Kannada letter, not a symbol
ಠ is the letter ṭha in the Kannada abugida, used by around forty million speakers in southern India. Its adoption as an eye was pure visual coincidence, and it spread worldwide as the look of disapproval without any of its readers knowing the script.
The anger mark comes straight from manga
The cross-shaped 💢 depicts a bulging vein on the forehead, a shorthand Japanese comics have used for decades. Unicode encoded it as an emoji in 2010, which is why it can be pasted into a kaomoji as if it were punctuation.
What is angry kaomoji?
Angry kaomoji are Japanese-style text faces showing irritation, rage, and side-eye, built from ordinary Unicode characters rather than images.
How do I copy angry kaomoji?
Tap any face on this page and it copies as plain text, ready to paste into a chat, bio, caption, or username.
Do angry kaomoji work on Discord, Instagram, and TikTok?
Yes. They are Unicode text, so they work anywhere text is accepted.
What does ಠ_ಠ mean?
It is the look of disapproval. ಠ is a letter from the Kannada script of southern India, chosen purely because it resembles a narrowed eye. It carries no meaning in Kannada.
What are 💢 and ꐦ?
Both are anger marks. The cross-shaped 💢 comes from manga, where it represents a bulging vein on the forehead. ꐦ is a Yi character used the same way.
Are angry kaomoji rude?
Most are playful. The exception is 凸( •̀_•́ )凸, where 凸 depicts a raised middle finger. Use that one only where you would use the gesture itself.
What is the difference between annoyed and rage faces?
Anger marks and arms. A plain pout such as ( 。 •`ᴖ´• 。) is annoyance; add ヽ ノ arms or a 💢 mark and it becomes rage.
Which angry kaomoji are best for short messages?
ಠ_ಠ, (¬_¬"), and (`⌒´) are compact, widely supported, and instantly readable.
Can angry kaomoji be affectionate?
Yes, often. A small pout after a teasing message reads as fond exasperation rather than real anger. Tone comes from context.
How many angry kaomoji are on this page?
There are 130 curated faces, grouped into annoyed, mad, rage, side eye, and action expressions.